I made the mistake of checking the weather forecast before my first trip to Grindelwald. It said overcast. Rain likely. I almost rebooked for another day. But the train from Interlaken climbed through a wall of cloud at about 800 metres, and then suddenly — blue sky, sharp peaks, and the Eiger filling the entire window. The clouds were below us.
That is Grindelwald in a nutshell. It surprises you.

This little village in the Bernese Oberland has been pulling in visitors since the 1800s, when British mountaineers arrived with ice axes and questionable ambitions. Today it draws everyone from casual hikers to adrenaline junkies to families with strollers. And the good news? Getting here from Interlaken takes about 35 minutes by train. No car needed. No complicated logistics.

Here is everything you need to know to plan your visit — how to get there, what to do when you arrive, which tours are actually worth the money, and a few things I wish someone had told me before I went.

Short on time? Here are my top picks:
Best overall: Zurich: Day Trip to Grindelwald, Interlaken & Lauterbrunnen — $140. Full-day guided trip from Zurich covering all three iconic stops. The most popular option by far and it runs like clockwork.
Best for thrills: Grindelwald Gondola Ride to Mount First — $93. Gondola, cliff walk, mountain cart, and scooter all in one ticket. Pure fun.
Best for adrenaline: Canyon Swing in Grindelwald — $180. A 90-metre free-fall swing over a gorge. Not for everyone, but those who do it never shut up about it.
- How to Get from Interlaken to Grindelwald
- A Brief History of Grindelwald (and Why It Matters)
- What to Do in Grindelwald
- First Cliff Walk by Tissot
- Bachalpsee Hike
- Grindelwald Glacier Canyon
- Eiger Express to Eigergletscher
- The Best Grindelwald Tours to Book
- 1. Zurich: Day Trip to Grindelwald, Interlaken & Lauterbrunnen — 0
- 2. Grindelwald Gondola Ride to Mount First —
- 3. From Lucerne: Day Trip to Grindelwald & Lauterbrunnen — from 0
- 4. Canyon Swing in Grindelwald — 0
- 5. Mount First Gondola Ride from Grindelwald (Viator) —
- When to Visit Grindelwald
- Tips That Will Save You Time and Money
- Getting Around the Bernese Oberland
- What You Will Actually See
- Day Trip vs Overnight: Which Makes More Sense?
- Combine It With These
How to Get from Interlaken to Grindelwald
The Bernese Oberland Railway (BOB) connects Interlaken Ost to Grindelwald directly. Trains run every 30 minutes from around 6:30am to 10:30pm. The ride takes 33-37 minutes and costs about CHF 12.40 one way (second class). If you have a Swiss Travel Pass, it is fully covered.

A couple of practical notes. Interlaken has two stations: Ost (East) and West. You want Interlaken Ost. The Grindelwald train departs from there, not from West. If your hotel is nearer to Interlaken West, allow an extra 5 minutes — a local train connects the two stations constantly.
Driving is possible but honestly not worth it. Parking in Grindelwald costs CHF 5-15 per day, the roads are narrow, and you will sit in traffic behind tour coaches during summer. The train is faster, cheaper, and more scenic.

For day trips from Zurich or Lucerne, the fastest route is Zurich HB to Interlaken Ost (about 2 hours by IC train), then the BOB to Grindelwald. From Lucerne it is about 1 hour 50 minutes with one change in Interlaken. Guided day trips from both cities handle all the logistics — more on those below.
A Brief History of Grindelwald (and Why It Matters)
Grindelwald was a farming community for centuries. Cattle, dairy, hard winters, quiet summers. That changed around 1818 when a group of British travellers arrived, took one look at the glaciers, and decided this was the place to be. Within a few decades, the village had its first hotels, a railway connection, and a growing reputation as the birthplace of Alpine tourism.

The Eiger North Face — Nordwand in German — is the other half of the story. This 1,800-metre vertical limestone wall earned the nickname Mordwand (Murder Wall) after a series of fatal climbing attempts in the 1930s. Several teams tried and died on the face between 1935 and 1937, often in full view of travelers watching through telescopes from Kleine Scheidegg.

The first successful ascent came in July 1938, when a team of four climbers — Anderl Heckmair, Ludwig Vorg, Heinrich Harrer, and Fritz Kasparek — reached the summit after a brutal three-day climb. Harrer later wrote about it in The White Spider, and the story has drawn mountaineers to Grindelwald ever since.
You don’t need to climb anything. But knowing this history makes the Eiger hit differently when you see it from the train window or the First Cliff Walk. It is not just a mountain. It is a monument to ambition, stubbornness, and a lot of bad decisions made in good weather.
What to Do in Grindelwald
First Cliff Walk by Tissot
Take the Grindelwald-First gondola to the top (2,168m) and step onto a steel walkway bolted to the cliff face. The path extends out over a sheer drop with views of the Eiger, Schreckhorn, and the glaciers below. There is a glass-bottomed section midway that makes your stomach drop even though your brain knows it is perfectly safe.

The cliff walk itself is free once you have the gondola ticket. But the gondola is not cheap — about CHF 66 return for adults. The multi-activity ticket (gondola + First Flyer zipline + mountain cart + scooter) runs around CHF 100 and is much better value if you want the full experience.
Bachalpsee Hike
From the First gondola station, a 50-minute walk on a well-marked trail takes you to Bachalpsee, an Alpine lake at 2,265 metres. On a calm day, the Schreckhorn and Wetterhorn reflect perfectly in the water. It is one of the most photographed spots in Switzerland and honestly it earns every pixel.

The trail is flat enough for families but do wear proper shoes — it is rocky in places and gets slippery after rain. Bring water and snacks. There is nothing at the lake itself.

Grindelwald Glacier Canyon
A 20-minute walk from the village centre takes you to this narrow gorge carved by glacial meltwater over thousands of years. Wooden walkways wind through the canyon, and the turquoise water at the bottom is absurdly blue. Entry is about CHF 19 for adults. It is short — maybe 30-40 minutes to walk through — but impressive.

Eiger Express to Eigergletscher
The Eiger Express is a tri-cable gondola that opened in 2020, connecting Grindelwald’s new terminal directly to Eigergletscher station at 2,320m. From there you can continue to Jungfraujoch — the Top of Europe by rack railway. The old route via Kleine Scheidegg took about 90 minutes from Grindelwald. The Eiger Express cuts it to 45 minutes. It completely changed the math for day-trippers.

The Best Grindelwald Tours to Book
You can absolutely visit Grindelwald independently — train from Interlaken, buy a gondola ticket, hike around, train back. But if you are coming from Zurich, Lucerne, or another Swiss city and want someone else to handle the logistics, a guided day trip saves you planning time and often includes activities that would cost more if booked separately.
Here are the best options based on what I have seen, heard, and read from thousands of visitor reviews.
1. Zurich: Day Trip to Grindelwald, Interlaken & Lauterbrunnen — $140

This is the big one. A 12-hour guided day trip from Zurich that hits all three major Bernese Oberland stops. The bus is comfortable, the guides know their stuff, and you get a choice of activities in Grindelwald — cable car, canyon walk, or just wandering the village. At $140 per person, it is not cheap by global standards, but by Swiss standards it is actually reasonable for a full day with transport included.
What makes this tour work is the pacing. You are not rushed through any stop. You get real free time in each village, and the guide gives you options rather than herding everyone to the same spot. The ride back to Zurich in the evening is a good two hours, so bring headphones or just nap. Over 7,000 visitors have booked this one and most come back raving.
2. Grindelwald Gondola Ride to Mount First — $93

If you are already in Grindelwald (or willing to get yourself there), this is the ticket to buy. The gondola whisks you up to 2,168 metres where the First Cliff Walk, mountain cart, First Flyer zipline, and the trail to Bachalpsee all start. At $93, it covers the gondola ride and the views are genuinely world-class.
One thing worth knowing: the activities at the top (First Flyer, mountain cart, trottibike) cost extra on the basic ticket. The combination tickets are better value if you want to do more than the cliff walk. Families with older kids will get the most out of this — the mountain cart ride down is a highlight that adults enjoy just as much.
3. From Lucerne: Day Trip to Grindelwald & Lauterbrunnen — from $120

Same concept as the Zurich trip but starting from Lucerne, which shaves about 30 minutes off the drive to the Bernese Oberland. The route goes through the Brunig Pass and the scenery along the way is fantastic — think deep green lakes, waterfalls, and mountain pastures. The tour covers Grindelwald and Lauterbrunnen with free time in both villages.
The trade-off is fewer reviews (around 680) and a slightly lower satisfaction rating compared to the Zurich version. Some visitors mention the Grindelwald stop felt shorter than expected. But if you are based in Lucerne, this makes more logistical sense than backtracking to Zurich. The drive itself is gorgeous, which counts for a lot.
4. Canyon Swing in Grindelwald — $180

This is for the adrenaline crowd. A 90-metre free-fall canyon swing over the Grindelwald gorge, with the Alps as your backdrop while you scream. The whole experience takes about 2-3 hours including safety briefing, gear-up, and the swing itself. At $180, it is not a casual add-on — this is an event.
The staff are excellent. Multiple visitors mention how good the team is at calming nerves, cracking jokes, and making sure everyone feels safe. The swing itself lasts maybe 10 seconds of pure free-fall followed by a long arc over the canyon. You can go solo or tandem. If you book with a friend who claims they are brave, watch their face at the edge. That alone is worth the money. Nearly 370 bookings and a 4.9 rating tells you this one delivers.
5. Mount First Gondola Ride from Grindelwald (Viator) — $95

Similar to option 2 but booked through Viator instead of GetYourGuide. The price is nearly identical at $95, and you get the same gondola ride to First with flexible time at the summit. The Viator version includes the option to add activities like the mountain bike trail (no pedals, just brakes and gravity — genuinely one of the most fun things I have heard travellers rave about) and the cliff walk.
Why include this alongside the GYG option? Different cancellation policies, different availability windows, and sometimes one platform has dates the other does not. If option 2 is sold out for your date, check this one. The experience on the mountain is identical.
When to Visit Grindelwald
Summer (June to September) is peak season. The gondolas are running, the hiking trails are clear of snow, and the weather is warm enough for T-shirts at lower elevations. July and August are the most crowded — expect queues at the First gondola and packed trains from Interlaken. Early June and late September are sweet spots: good weather, thinner crowds, lower prices.

Winter (December to March) is for skiing and snowshoeing. Grindelwald-First has a ski area that connects to the larger Jungfrau ski region. It is not as famous as Zermatt or Verbier, but the scenery is hard to beat and it is significantly less expensive. The village itself turns into a snow globe — atmospheric, quiet, cold.

Shoulder months (April-May, October-November) are risky. Some gondolas close for maintenance, hiking trails may still have snow, and restaurants cut back their hours. But if you get a clear day in October, the autumn colours against the Eiger are extraordinary.
Tips That Will Save You Time and Money
Buy a Jungfrau Travel Pass if you are spending 2+ days in the region. It covers most trains, gondolas, and buses in the Bernese Oberland and pays for itself quickly. A 3-day pass costs around CHF 210. Compare that to a single First gondola return (CHF 66) plus a Jungfraujoch ticket (CHF 205+) and the maths is obvious.

Start early. The first gondola up to First leaves around 8:30am in summer. Be on it. By 11am the cliff walk is packed and the photo opportunities involve more elbows than mountains. Early birds get the views to themselves.
Check the webcams. Grindelwald has live webcams at First, Mannlichen, and Kleine Scheidegg. Check them on the morning of your visit. Cloud cover at village level (1,034m) does not mean cloud cover at First (2,168m). I have seen blue sky above the clouds more than once.
Wear layers. The village might be 20°C on a summer day, but the temperature at First can be 8°C with wind. Bring a proper jacket, even in July.
The Coop supermarket in the village centre is your friend. Buy sandwiches, drinks, and snacks here instead of paying summit restaurant prices. A simple lunch on the mountain costs CHF 25-35 per person. A supermarket picnic costs a third of that.

Getting Around the Bernese Oberland
Grindelwald is part of a connected web of mountain villages linked by trains, gondolas, and cable cars. Here is the quick map of key connections from Grindelwald:
Grindelwald to Kleine Scheidegg: Rack railway, about 35 minutes. This is the junction for Jungfraujoch trains. Stunning views of the Eiger the entire way.
Grindelwald to Eigergletscher (via Eiger Express): New tri-cable gondola, 15 minutes. Connects to the Jungfraujoch rack railway and cuts the old Kleine Scheidegg route in half.
Grindelwald to Interlaken: BOB train, 33-37 minutes, every 30 minutes.
Grindelwald to Lauterbrunnen: No direct route. Go back to Zweilutschinen (15 min) and change for Lauterbrunnen (another 15 min). Or go to Interlaken and change there.

What You Will Actually See
Grindelwald sits in a valley at 1,034 metres, with the Eiger (3,967m), the Wetterhorn (3,692m), and the Schreckhorn (4,078m) forming a wall of rock and ice above it. The landscape is a mix of bright green pastures, dark pine forests, and grey granite. In summer, wildflowers carpet the meadows. In winter, everything is white.

From the First Cliff Walk, you look straight down into the valley and across to the Eiger North Face. On a clear day, you can see all the way to the Jungfrau and beyond. The Wetterhorn looms directly in front of you, close enough that you can pick out individual rockfalls on its face.

The village itself is small but charming. Traditional wooden chalets line the main street, most of them now hotels or restaurants. The church with its distinctive steeple has been standing since the 12th century. It is a five-minute walk from one end of the village to the other, which means you can see everything at ground level in an hour or two before heading up the mountain.


Day Trip vs Overnight: Which Makes More Sense?
A day trip from Interlaken works perfectly if you just want to ride the gondola, walk the cliff walk, and maybe do the Bachalpsee hike. You can be there by 9am and back by 5pm with plenty of time.
But if you want to do First AND Jungfraujoch AND the Glacier Canyon, one day is not enough. You will spend half your time on transport and feel rushed at every stop. For two or more activities, stay overnight. Hotels in Grindelwald range from CHF 120/night for basic B&Bs to CHF 400+ for the grand old establishments.

The other argument for staying overnight: sunrise. The Eiger at dawn, with alpenglow turning the grey rock orange and pink, is one of those sights that genuinely stops you mid-step. You cannot get that on a day trip unless you catch a very early train.
Combine It With These
Grindelwald pairs naturally with a few other big Bernese Oberland experiences. If you are already making the trip from Interlaken, you might as well stack your days.
Jungfraujoch is the obvious one — the new Eiger Express gondola from Grindelwald makes it easier to combine both in two days. Do Grindelwald and First on day one, Jungfraujoch on day two. The views from the Top of Europe observation deck at 3,454 metres are otherworldly, and the ice palace carved inside the glacier is unlike anything else in the Alps.
For something completely different, tandem paragliding from Interlaken gives you an aerial perspective on the whole region. You launch from a hillside above town and float over the lakes with the Eiger, Monch, and Jungfrau spread out in front of you. No experience needed — the pilot does everything.
And if you are heading back to Zurich, a stop at the Lindt Home of Chocolate museum in Kilchberg is a satisfying way to end a Swiss mountain trip. The world’s tallest chocolate fountain is there, and the tasting room is all-you-can-eat. After a few days of Swiss prices, free chocolate feels revolutionary.


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